Overview
'What do you want?' is a constant query put to economic and globalization activists decrying current poverty, alienation, and degradation. In this highly praised new work, destined to attract worldwide attention and support, Michael Albert provides an answer: participatory economics, 'parecon' for short β a new economy, an alternative to capitalism, built on familiar values including solidarity, equity, diversity, and people democratically controlling their own lives, but utilizing original institutions fully described and defended in this book.Synopsis
Albert offers an alternative system of participatory economics to end the dehumanizing failures and injustices of free-market capitalism.
Library Journal
The title of Albert's new book is short for "participatory economics," which might just be the answer for those anticapitalists in our midst looking for other economic alternatives. Albert, author, activist, and founder of Z Magazine, firmly rejects modern capitalism and presents a new economic model built on the principles of equity, solidarity, diversity, and participatory self-management. We've seen examples of this before in cooperatives, communes, and worker-owned plants and collective workplaces, but those are small-scale operations compared with what Albert is calling for here. He is advocating a top-to-bottom economic revolution that would dismantle corporations as we know them and restructure work processes, initiating various levels of workplace consensus and ensuring that work would be distributed fairly amongst all workers. Concrete examples of where "participatory economics" had been successfully implemented (whether in companies or municipalities) would have benefited Albert's highly theoretical work. Unfortunately, the book reads more like a political manifesto-long on idealistic proposals and short on real-life applications. There is no question that there is much wrong with the capitalist system today, but it is arguable whether the world is ready for the upheavals that would no doubt ensue on the way to achieving the worker Utopia that Albert has described. Suitable for economic collections.-Richard Drezen, Washington Post/NYC Bureau Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.